Difference between revisions of "Tamar Tea Tephi"
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− | ''Tamar Tea Tephi'' was a princess of Judah. | + | [[Image:Tephi.jpg|thumb|Princess Tamar Tea Tephi]] |
+ | '''Tamar Tea Tephi''' was a princess of Judah. | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
+ | According to a story told by [[Shahrizad]], Tamar and the prophet [[Jeremiah]] brought the [[Stone of Destiny]] to [[Ireland]]. There, Tamar married King [[Eochaid]]; Jeremiah gave the Stone of Destiny to Eochaid as Tamar's dowry. ''([[Rock and Roll|"Rock & Roll"]])'' | ||
− | + | ==Appearances== | |
+ | * [[Rock and Roll|"Rock & Roll"]] (First Appearance, No Lines) | ||
− | ==Real | + | ==Real World Background== |
+ | In some legends about the Stone of Destiny, Tamar is described as the daughter of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zedekiah Zedekiah], the last King of Judah (though she is not mentioned in the Old Testament). She and Jeremiah came to Ireland in 585 B.C., bringing the Stone of Destiny with them; there, Tamar married Eochaid. | ||
− | + | Tamar may have originally been an eponymous figure, invented to explain the name of [[Tara]], just as [[Scota]] was invented to explain the name of [[Scotland]]. | |
− | + | [[Category:Canon characters]] | |
+ | [[Category:Humans]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Real world characters]] |
Latest revision as of 12:02, 15 May 2024
Tamar Tea Tephi was a princess of Judah.
History
According to a story told by Shahrizad, Tamar and the prophet Jeremiah brought the Stone of Destiny to Ireland. There, Tamar married King Eochaid; Jeremiah gave the Stone of Destiny to Eochaid as Tamar's dowry. ("Rock & Roll")
Appearances
- "Rock & Roll" (First Appearance, No Lines)
Real World Background
In some legends about the Stone of Destiny, Tamar is described as the daughter of Zedekiah, the last King of Judah (though she is not mentioned in the Old Testament). She and Jeremiah came to Ireland in 585 B.C., bringing the Stone of Destiny with them; there, Tamar married Eochaid.
Tamar may have originally been an eponymous figure, invented to explain the name of Tara, just as Scota was invented to explain the name of Scotland.